State ex rel. Glaser v. Mason

24 Mo. App. 321, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 188
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 18, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 Mo. App. 321 (State ex rel. Glaser v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Glaser v. Mason, 24 Mo. App. 321, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 188 (Mo. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action against Isaac M. Mason, formerly sheriff of the city of St. Louis, and the sureties on his bond, for an alleged breach of his bond in a trespass which consisted of seizing, under a writ of attachment, property claimed by the plaintiffs’ usee, merchants of St. Louis, doing business under the style of Glaser Brothers, who will in the succeeding portions of this opinion be designated as the plaintiffs. The trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs. The evidence given at the trial tended to show that Isaac Trepp, a merchant doing business at Centralia, Illinois, was indebted to the plaintiffs, wholesale'merchants in St. Louis, in the sum of $1,749.13, for merchandise sold and delivered by them to him at various times, which indebtedness had been settled by a promissory note, which note was past due and dishonored ; that the plaintiffs, took the advice of counsel, to the effect that they might lawfully receive payment from Trepp in goods, provided they did not receive a greater [323]*323amount of goods at a fair valuation than the amount of their debt; that thereupon one of the plaintiffs and three other creditors of Trepp, together with the counsel of the plaintiffs and of other creditors, who had given this •advice, proceeded by the evening train from St. Louis to Centralia; that, after arriving at Centralia and registering at the hotel, they went to Trepp’s store; that Trepp went in and sent away his clerk whom he found therein; that the whole party then assembled in the store, and, from an invoice which Trepp had previously ■caused to be taken of his goods, proceeded to parcel them out among themselves, the plaintiffs getting not more than the amount of their indebtedness at a fair valuation' of the goods ; that bills of sale were drawn by the counsel, in pursuance of the agreement which had been made between Trepp and these four creditors respectively ; that the note of Trepp which the plaintiffs held, was endorsed, “Paid by merchandise, April 18, 1883. Glaser Bros. ;” that, on the following morning, the goods which had thus been set apart and transferred to the plaintiffs in payment of their debt, were hastily packed and shipped to St. Louis ; that the goods which had been set apart by Trepp to the other three creditors, who had come with him from St. Louis, were in like manner.’hastily packed and shipped away by these creditors on the succeeding day ; that the goods thus turned •over to the plaintiffs in payment of their debt were attached by Samuel ■ C. Davis & Company, creditors of Trepp, on their arrival in St. Louis, and that they were •appraised in the attachment proceeding at the sum of $1,001.30, but that this did not include all the goods which were thus turned over. ‘ It was admitted by the defendants’ counsel that at the date when the goods were thus turned over by Trepp to the plaintiffs at Centralia, the amount of the note above described, $1,74.9.13, was due from Trepp to the plaintiffs. It was also admitted by the defendants’ counsel that the appraisement of the .goods at $1,001.30, as above stated, was a fair appraise[324]*324ment. There is no room upon the evidence for the contention that a greater amount of goods than enough to pay their debt was turned over by Trepp to the plaintiffs, and it is fair to defendants’ counsel to say that such a contention is not made. The record has been read with care, and we discover no substantial evidence in it tending to show that the plaintiffs received these goods from Trepp for any other purpose than the payment of the debt which Trepp owed them.

We are asked by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs, in view of the fact, stated by them in their written argument, that other cases of this kind are pending in the circuit court, to express an opinion upon the question, whether in this case there was any evidence of fraud in the transaction which is challenged, to take the-case to the jury. It is true that there is in every situation a general presumption of right acting, and that a party who challenges a transaction on the ground of fraud takes upon himself the burden of proving fraud. But it is seldom possible to prove fraud by direct evidence. Men who set about to commit fraud do not do-it openly, nor do they publish their purpose to the world. Fraud must be inferred from circumstances, and, in most cases, from an extensive collection of facts which surround a transaction and tend more or' less to characterize it. As a general rule it is very dangerous for the judge, in a contest of this kind, to direct a verdict on the ground that there is no evidence tending to establish fraud; and we are not prepared to say, especially as we are not called upon by the' record to do so, that the learned judge ought to have directed a verdict for the plaintiffs in this case. We' are, however, prepared to say, and we think it right to say, because it has a bearing on one of the . questions which arises in the case, that the verdict in this case is plainly for the right party; that if the jury had rendered a contrary verdict it would have been the duty of the trial court upon the-first trial, at least, to set it -aside as [325]*325being against the decisive weight of evidence ; and that the verdict which has been rendered embodies the conclusion which we should be obliged to reach upon this evidence, if we were dealing with it as chancellors. Such being our view of the evidence, we come now to the questions which have been pressed upon our attention on behalf of the defendants.

I. The first question is, whether the court did not err in refusing to allow the defendants to show; by several witnesses, that Ihe goods upon their arrival in St. Louis were in such a condition as indicated that the boxes had been hastily and imperfectly packed. We quite agree with the defendants’ counsel that a wide latitude is to be allowed in admitting evidence in cases of this character, and especially in the cross-examination of the parties to the transaction which is challenged as fraudulent. We do not wish to modify, limit, or abate anything which we have heretofore said in support of this view. The principle is one of great importance. All eourts have so viewed it. Our supreme court in several opinions has expressed it in one form of words and another, and so have we. It would, indeed, be an extreme case which would require the reversal of a judgment on the ground that the trial court had allowed too wide a latitude in admitting testimony which might have any possible tendency to throw light upon the bonajides of a transaction of this kind. But, conceding as we do this principle to the fullest extent, we are unable, in the state of this record, to see wherein the court committed any error, and especially any error which could have been prejudicial to the defendants, in excluding the testimony as to the state of the packages when they arrived at St. Louis. The court admitted all the evidence which was adduced on either side as to what took place at Centralia, when the goods were parcelled out among the creditors of Trepp ; the manner in which it was done; the secrecy and dispatch which characterized the movements of the parties; the haste with which the goods [326]*326were packed; the fact that the most valuable of the goods were packed first and hauled to the express office, and the imperfect manner in which the packing was done.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Corey v. Hardison
72 S.E.2d 416 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1952)
Schroeder v. Mason
25 Mo. App. 190 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1887)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Mo. App. 321, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-glaser-v-mason-moctapp-1887.